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The Sun. (North Canton, Stark County, Ohio), 1991-11-20

1991-11-20-001

*fw III n*w\* ==^ m
*TXJ3Llla***ilZ*VZll\lI*^^
70th YEAR
Serving the People
of
North Canton
and Lake Township
Vol. 70 — No. 6
,-.,. J ■'-'.' -t,-
•Uri
&*rr.
r*ir'™rxm\'i***^ix*E**aW^
North Canton, Ohio, Wednesday, November 20, 1991
jyTypnF^-sy^vcamgefcWit.' ■
Tv/o Sections
16 Paaes
' -l'iJ,y
h tVCill i-
L-smsEjntrsssaaaifaiaiffia-jECjssr.^^
Council ponders water issues
B):iK)rni:.MC(.Ki:\v
The subject of water was
high on North Canton City Council's agenda Monday night.
City council wants to study
a request by Stark County Commissioners to increase the a-
mount of water sold to tlie
county frcm 200,000 gallons per
day to 500,000.
Council wants to be sure the
city can provide the extra
water without jeopardizing its
capacity to serve North Canton
residents or placing an unnecessary strain on water treatment facilities.
In 1989 North Canton agreed
to sell water to the county for
transmission to the 100 homes
nearest the Uniontown toxic
waste dump. At that time the
county estimated 200,000 gallons would be sufficient for
ten years, city officials said.
^Ilie county also agreed to explore alternate water sources.
The county now plans to expand its services in the Union-
town area, city officials said.
Council will also study a
request by developer David
Kauth to extend city water east
from the intersection of Applegrove Rd. and Marquardt Ave. to
Elmhurst and north to the intersection of Elmhurst and Ivy
St. Kauth has purchased the
58-acre former Miller farm and
plans to build approximately
115 single family homes. Devel
opment is two years in the
future, Kauth says. The property is located in Plain Township.
Council suggested that the
water line be looped through
the proposed development at the
builder's expense. Looping is
more efficient than deadend
lines, city officials said.
Council authorized legislation granting a waterline easement in the Oakshire Place
development to permit future
construction. City water lines
were extended to Oakshire Place
several years ago.
If city council approves
legislation next Monday, the
city will advertise for bids in
December to install sidewalks
along Everhard Rd. from Main
St. west to the city limits.
The cost is estimated at
$150,000 but could run higher
if a traffic signal for a pedestrian crosswalk, perhaps in
the vicinity of Jonathan St.,
is included.
Construction should begin in
the spring and be completed by
the end of June, city officials
said.
Councilman Paul Blohm reported Jackson Township and
Plain Township officials are
receptive to continuing the
sidewalks beyond the city limits.
Councilman Joe Grady suggested it would be appropriate
to plant trees where possible
along Everhard Rd.
The program to upgrade major
traffic roadways at city expense should be expanded to
include improvements to inner
city streetways, said councilman Jim Maag.
Meeting in executive session, council agreed to pay the
moral claim of North Canton
volunteer firefighter Robert
Prince. The amount of the claim
cannot exceed $1,963.
Prince contends he was on
fire department business when
he stepped in a hole and fell
in October 1988. Prince says
he twisted his leg in the fall.
The inmediate pain disappeared
but recurred 18 months later,
he says, and resulted in a
permanent loss of sensory feel-"
ing from about the waist and
down the right leg. When he
attempted to file a Workman's
Compensation claim in April
1990, Prince says he was given
an incorrect form by a city
employee which prejudiced the
Workman's Claim against him.
The city disputes the incorrect
form charge.
"It was council's opinion
that Mr. Prince's injuries were
suffered in the line of duty
and should be covered," said
Council Vice President Daryl
Revoldt.
City Administrator Phillip
Roush declined to comment.
fZ&h^***.'*
i \f'-
Fighting Illiteracy in Stark County
Stark County and North Canton are involved in
the Adult Basic Education program, a day and
avening program aimed at educating illiterate
members of society.
The program is funded by the Ohio Department
of Education and operated through the Canton City
Schools Adult Education Department.
Thelma Slater, Volunteer Coordinator said the
goal of the program is to make people productive
members of the society and, "to try to help
adults who lack adequate skills in reading and
other areas." It is geared to people over the
Jige of 16 who are not enrolled in a day school
program.
In North Canton, Ester Brunt and Donna Marks
teach classes. Ester meets with 20 foreign students each week at Trinity Baptist Church to
teach them to read and write the English language. Donna meets with 25 adults at Hoover High
School, preparing them to take the high school
Graduate Equivalency Test. In Hartville, Martha
Hyland teaches a GED class and a basic literacy
class each week at tlie Hartville United Church of
Christ.
George Tsarwhas of the Canton City Schools is
the local director of the program that is in its
fourth year helping people in the Stark County
area. Last year, nearly 4,000 people took part
Nearly 35,000 people in Stark County alone are
classified as functionally illiterate meaning
they read at or below a fifth grade level. Nationwide, 1 in 5 people are illiterate. Slater
expressed the fact that illiteracy effects every
part of our society.
Tlie program is offered to participants at no
cost. Most teachers involved are volunteers who
spend at least two hours per week with students
after taking part in a nine hour training session. Anyone interested in volunteering or being
a student in the program should contact Thelma
Slater (pictured above at a training session) at
456-9590 to get more information. By: Doug Froelieh.
Judg6 Milligan to retire at end of term
John R. Milligan, Administrative Judge of the Fifth
District Court of Appeals has
announced he will not seek reelection in November 1992.
At his retirement in January
1993 Judge Milligan will have
the longest judicial service
record in Stark County. He
will have served as an elected
judge for 30 years, over 17 on
the bench of the Stark County
Family Court. He was elected
to the Court of Appeals in 1980
and is completing his second
six-year term.
In anticipation of his retirement. Judge Milligan commented:
"It has been exciting and
challenging to be a part of the
legal system during three decades of enormous social, and
legal change. Perhaps at no
time in history have we witnessed such volatile change in
the values of our society holds
and the way they are protected
and advanced."
Judge Milligan said the concept of "family" had changed
over his years on the bench.
He offered as evidence the fact
that family court processed
more divorce cases in his 17
years than in the entire history of the county. The numbers
continued unabated. Judge Milligan said.
During his judicial career
Judge Milligan has been a familiar face on the lecture
circuit in matters of juvenile
and family law and appellate
procedure.
He is a former president of
the Ohio Juvenile Judges Association and was a trustee of
the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges.
He was a delegate to the White
House Conference of Families
and Children. In 1980 President
Reagan appointed him to the
National Advisory Commission on
Juvenile Justice.
He is the author of "Ohio
Family Law", a two-volume treatise.
Judge Milligan is considering several retirement options:
service as a retired judge,
teaching and writing. He also
enjoys travel, golf and tennis.
Judge Milligan and his wife
Phyllis live in North Canton.
They have three children and
seven grandchildren.
MEET THE LIBRARIAN ~ Whitney Shue, 4, and Robert
Lessack, 3, show Hartville Childrens' Librarian Whitney
Long how to assemble a puzzle. Long, a North Canton
resident and a 1983 graduate of Hoover High School, was
recently appointed to thc Hartville position. (I'hoto by
Joanne Malene)
North Canton resident Whitney Long
appointed Children's Librarian in Lake
lis: JOANNE MAI.KNE
"I just about grew up in a
library! I love to read and I
love working with kids," exclaimed Whitney Long, 26, the
r./iw children' s librarian at the
Hartville branch of the Stark
District Library.
Appointed just two weeks
ago, Long just bubbles over
with enthusiasm for her new
job.
"Although I find the thought
of the summer reading program
kind of intimidating because of
the quality of the program that
we have had here in the past, I
am really looking forward to
getting to know the people in
the community and the children
who come here," stated Whitney
Long.
"I want to expand our community outreach, to get the
community more involved in the
library and to get the library
more involved in the oommunity.
It is important to get toddlers
and preschoolers used to coming
to the library so that in later
years, they want to keep on
coming here.
"Literacy is so important,"
she continued, "and libraries
offer a wide range of reading
materials for everyone to
read."
Whitney Long, as does any
reader, has definite favorite
books to recommend for children. "One of my favorite
books is "The Napping House' by
Audrey and Don Woods. It has
wonderful illustrations. For
the older child, Beverly Cleary
and Judy Blume are proven authors. They have lasted for
years. There are not a whole
lot of new authors out there
for teens. Most teens want to
read about things that are
happening to them now. There
are ideas and thoughts that are
not taught in the schools,
things teens worry about or
want to know more about and
reading books is one way for
them to gain this knowledge."
A 1983 graduate of Hoover
High School and a 1987 graduate
of Kent State with a BA in
psychology. Long spent seven
and a half year working in the
North Canton library starting
out as a page and then working
as a clerk. When budget cuts
occurred, she was out of a job.
She stayed out of library work
Scholarship
High school students who are
U.S. citizens and who are interested in applying for $1,000
college scholarships should
request applications by December 14, from Educational Communications Scholarship Foundation, 721 N. McKinley Rd., PO
Box 5002, Lake Forest, H,
60045-5002.
To receive an application,
students should send a note
stating their name, address,
city, state, zip code, approximate grade point average and
year of graduation.
One hundred winners will be
selected on the basis of academic performance, involvement
in extra-curricular activities
and need for financial aid.
for three years until going to
work as a children's librarian
in East Canton for a year. She
came to the Hartville Library
as a clerk, intending to go
back to Kent for some graduate
work. When the children's librarian position unexpectedly
opened, she decided to put
things on hold.
"I really have to give credit to two people, Mrs. Margaret
Deible and Mrs. Carol Solly of
the North Canton Children's
Department. Mrs. Deible hired
me as a page and she and Mrs.
Solly have always encouraged me
in my library work," said Long.
Whitney and her mother, Pat,
a nurse at Aultman Hospital,
live in North Canton, but,
originally, they were Hartville
residents. She finds it amusing, giving credence to the old
saying "what goes around, comes
around", to think that she went
to kindergarten in the same
room where she is now the children's librarian.
When asked what a children's
librarian recommends for
Christmas giving, Whitney is
quick to say "all I want for
Christmas is a good book. For
one thing, a book can be shared
over and over again with the
whole family. "The Polar Express' is a wonderful book with
beautiful illustrations. Also,
the C.S. Lewis series the Nam-
ia series as they are called
("The Lion, Tlie Witch and the
Wardrobe") along with tlie 'Little House on the Prairie' series are wonderful books for
any age."
The Hartville Library, located on route 619 east out of
Hartville (behind the fire station) has user friendly hours,
opening at 9 a.m Monday tlirough
Saturday. Monday tlirough Thursday, tlie library closes at 9
p.m. and on Friday and Saturday, closes at 5 p.m.
Any Stark County resident
can use the facility and if you
do not have a Stark County
District Library card, someone
at the Hartville Library will
be glad to give you one. You do
not need to be a resident of
Lake Township to use this library.
Lake Zoning Commission
holds work session
By: BETTY O'NEILL RODERICK
Members of the Lake Township
Zoning Commission held a work
session on Tuesday, November
12, to discuss changes in the
township zoning amendment.
The board reviewed buffer
zone requirements and determined that changes would not be
necessary unless usage of the
property was changed.
In other business, the board
determined that a pedestrian
walkway would need to be clearly identified, and visible to
the public and to other vehicles at drive-up windows.
Action on these issues is
expected to be taken at the
zoning commission's next meeting set for December 17 at 7:30
p.m.
'-'"-" '■'"'■"'" -.'■■■,.--3*
local news in brief
North Canton Planning Commission
The North Canton Planning
Commission will hold a meeting
on Wednesday, December 4, at
7:30 p.m. in the Council Chambers at North Canton City Hall.
The following items will be
on the agenda: Minutes of the
October 2 meeting; Review of
final plat for Sturbridge No.
3, part of outlot 277, 25 lots,
by Cooper and Associates for
Kauth Builders.
Zoning Board of Appeals
The North Canton Zoning and
Building Standards Board of
appeals will hold a meeting on
Tuesday evening, November 26 at
7 p.m. in the Council Chambers
at North Canton City Hall.
The following items will be
on the agenda: Minutes of the
September 24 meeting; Application No. 91-36062 filed Novem
ber 5: Request for variance
frcm height restrictions for
storage building at 125 Clear-
mount SE, by Charles fi Jean
Bender and Application No. 91-
36105 filed November 15: Request for substitution of a
legal, non-conforming use at
1245 S. Main St. for used car
sales, by Red Kalkman.
North Canton Rotary
It is time to make your
reservations for the December
5th Christmas Party. The party
will be held at Congress Lake.
Cocktails will be served at
6:30 p.m.; dinner will be at
7:15.
Call a friend and make plans
*° attend.

*fw III n*w\* ==^ m
*TXJ3Llla***ilZ*VZll\lI*^^
70th YEAR
Serving the People
of
North Canton
and Lake Township
Vol. 70 — No. 6
,-.,. J ■'-'.' -t,-
•Uri
&*rr.
r*ir'™rxm\'i***^ix*E**aW^
North Canton, Ohio, Wednesday, November 20, 1991
jyTypnF^-sy^vcamgefcWit.' ■
Tv/o Sections
16 Paaes
' -l'iJ,y
h tVCill i-
L-smsEjntrsssaaaifaiaiffia-jECjssr.^^
Council ponders water issues
B):iK)rni:.MC(.Ki:\v
The subject of water was
high on North Canton City Council's agenda Monday night.
City council wants to study
a request by Stark County Commissioners to increase the a-
mount of water sold to tlie
county frcm 200,000 gallons per
day to 500,000.
Council wants to be sure the
city can provide the extra
water without jeopardizing its
capacity to serve North Canton
residents or placing an unnecessary strain on water treatment facilities.
In 1989 North Canton agreed
to sell water to the county for
transmission to the 100 homes
nearest the Uniontown toxic
waste dump. At that time the
county estimated 200,000 gallons would be sufficient for
ten years, city officials said.
^Ilie county also agreed to explore alternate water sources.
The county now plans to expand its services in the Union-
town area, city officials said.
Council will also study a
request by developer David
Kauth to extend city water east
from the intersection of Applegrove Rd. and Marquardt Ave. to
Elmhurst and north to the intersection of Elmhurst and Ivy
St. Kauth has purchased the
58-acre former Miller farm and
plans to build approximately
115 single family homes. Devel
opment is two years in the
future, Kauth says. The property is located in Plain Township.
Council suggested that the
water line be looped through
the proposed development at the
builder's expense. Looping is
more efficient than deadend
lines, city officials said.
Council authorized legislation granting a waterline easement in the Oakshire Place
development to permit future
construction. City water lines
were extended to Oakshire Place
several years ago.
If city council approves
legislation next Monday, the
city will advertise for bids in
December to install sidewalks
along Everhard Rd. from Main
St. west to the city limits.
The cost is estimated at
$150,000 but could run higher
if a traffic signal for a pedestrian crosswalk, perhaps in
the vicinity of Jonathan St.,
is included.
Construction should begin in
the spring and be completed by
the end of June, city officials
said.
Councilman Paul Blohm reported Jackson Township and
Plain Township officials are
receptive to continuing the
sidewalks beyond the city limits.
Councilman Joe Grady suggested it would be appropriate
to plant trees where possible
along Everhard Rd.
The program to upgrade major
traffic roadways at city expense should be expanded to
include improvements to inner
city streetways, said councilman Jim Maag.
Meeting in executive session, council agreed to pay the
moral claim of North Canton
volunteer firefighter Robert
Prince. The amount of the claim
cannot exceed $1,963.
Prince contends he was on
fire department business when
he stepped in a hole and fell
in October 1988. Prince says
he twisted his leg in the fall.
The inmediate pain disappeared
but recurred 18 months later,
he says, and resulted in a
permanent loss of sensory feel-"
ing from about the waist and
down the right leg. When he
attempted to file a Workman's
Compensation claim in April
1990, Prince says he was given
an incorrect form by a city
employee which prejudiced the
Workman's Claim against him.
The city disputes the incorrect
form charge.
"It was council's opinion
that Mr. Prince's injuries were
suffered in the line of duty
and should be covered," said
Council Vice President Daryl
Revoldt.
City Administrator Phillip
Roush declined to comment.
fZ&h^***.'*
i \f'-
Fighting Illiteracy in Stark County
Stark County and North Canton are involved in
the Adult Basic Education program, a day and
avening program aimed at educating illiterate
members of society.
The program is funded by the Ohio Department
of Education and operated through the Canton City
Schools Adult Education Department.
Thelma Slater, Volunteer Coordinator said the
goal of the program is to make people productive
members of the society and, "to try to help
adults who lack adequate skills in reading and
other areas." It is geared to people over the
Jige of 16 who are not enrolled in a day school
program.
In North Canton, Ester Brunt and Donna Marks
teach classes. Ester meets with 20 foreign students each week at Trinity Baptist Church to
teach them to read and write the English language. Donna meets with 25 adults at Hoover High
School, preparing them to take the high school
Graduate Equivalency Test. In Hartville, Martha
Hyland teaches a GED class and a basic literacy
class each week at tlie Hartville United Church of
Christ.
George Tsarwhas of the Canton City Schools is
the local director of the program that is in its
fourth year helping people in the Stark County
area. Last year, nearly 4,000 people took part
Nearly 35,000 people in Stark County alone are
classified as functionally illiterate meaning
they read at or below a fifth grade level. Nationwide, 1 in 5 people are illiterate. Slater
expressed the fact that illiteracy effects every
part of our society.
Tlie program is offered to participants at no
cost. Most teachers involved are volunteers who
spend at least two hours per week with students
after taking part in a nine hour training session. Anyone interested in volunteering or being
a student in the program should contact Thelma
Slater (pictured above at a training session) at
456-9590 to get more information. By: Doug Froelieh.
Judg6 Milligan to retire at end of term
John R. Milligan, Administrative Judge of the Fifth
District Court of Appeals has
announced he will not seek reelection in November 1992.
At his retirement in January
1993 Judge Milligan will have
the longest judicial service
record in Stark County. He
will have served as an elected
judge for 30 years, over 17 on
the bench of the Stark County
Family Court. He was elected
to the Court of Appeals in 1980
and is completing his second
six-year term.
In anticipation of his retirement. Judge Milligan commented:
"It has been exciting and
challenging to be a part of the
legal system during three decades of enormous social, and
legal change. Perhaps at no
time in history have we witnessed such volatile change in
the values of our society holds
and the way they are protected
and advanced."
Judge Milligan said the concept of "family" had changed
over his years on the bench.
He offered as evidence the fact
that family court processed
more divorce cases in his 17
years than in the entire history of the county. The numbers
continued unabated. Judge Milligan said.
During his judicial career
Judge Milligan has been a familiar face on the lecture
circuit in matters of juvenile
and family law and appellate
procedure.
He is a former president of
the Ohio Juvenile Judges Association and was a trustee of
the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges.
He was a delegate to the White
House Conference of Families
and Children. In 1980 President
Reagan appointed him to the
National Advisory Commission on
Juvenile Justice.
He is the author of "Ohio
Family Law", a two-volume treatise.
Judge Milligan is considering several retirement options:
service as a retired judge,
teaching and writing. He also
enjoys travel, golf and tennis.
Judge Milligan and his wife
Phyllis live in North Canton.
They have three children and
seven grandchildren.
MEET THE LIBRARIAN ~ Whitney Shue, 4, and Robert
Lessack, 3, show Hartville Childrens' Librarian Whitney
Long how to assemble a puzzle. Long, a North Canton
resident and a 1983 graduate of Hoover High School, was
recently appointed to thc Hartville position. (I'hoto by
Joanne Malene)
North Canton resident Whitney Long
appointed Children's Librarian in Lake
lis: JOANNE MAI.KNE
"I just about grew up in a
library! I love to read and I
love working with kids," exclaimed Whitney Long, 26, the
r./iw children' s librarian at the
Hartville branch of the Stark
District Library.
Appointed just two weeks
ago, Long just bubbles over
with enthusiasm for her new
job.
"Although I find the thought
of the summer reading program
kind of intimidating because of
the quality of the program that
we have had here in the past, I
am really looking forward to
getting to know the people in
the community and the children
who come here," stated Whitney
Long.
"I want to expand our community outreach, to get the
community more involved in the
library and to get the library
more involved in the oommunity.
It is important to get toddlers
and preschoolers used to coming
to the library so that in later
years, they want to keep on
coming here.
"Literacy is so important,"
she continued, "and libraries
offer a wide range of reading
materials for everyone to
read."
Whitney Long, as does any
reader, has definite favorite
books to recommend for children. "One of my favorite
books is "The Napping House' by
Audrey and Don Woods. It has
wonderful illustrations. For
the older child, Beverly Cleary
and Judy Blume are proven authors. They have lasted for
years. There are not a whole
lot of new authors out there
for teens. Most teens want to
read about things that are
happening to them now. There
are ideas and thoughts that are
not taught in the schools,
things teens worry about or
want to know more about and
reading books is one way for
them to gain this knowledge."
A 1983 graduate of Hoover
High School and a 1987 graduate
of Kent State with a BA in
psychology. Long spent seven
and a half year working in the
North Canton library starting
out as a page and then working
as a clerk. When budget cuts
occurred, she was out of a job.
She stayed out of library work
Scholarship
High school students who are
U.S. citizens and who are interested in applying for $1,000
college scholarships should
request applications by December 14, from Educational Communications Scholarship Foundation, 721 N. McKinley Rd., PO
Box 5002, Lake Forest, H,
60045-5002.
To receive an application,
students should send a note
stating their name, address,
city, state, zip code, approximate grade point average and
year of graduation.
One hundred winners will be
selected on the basis of academic performance, involvement
in extra-curricular activities
and need for financial aid.
for three years until going to
work as a children's librarian
in East Canton for a year. She
came to the Hartville Library
as a clerk, intending to go
back to Kent for some graduate
work. When the children's librarian position unexpectedly
opened, she decided to put
things on hold.
"I really have to give credit to two people, Mrs. Margaret
Deible and Mrs. Carol Solly of
the North Canton Children's
Department. Mrs. Deible hired
me as a page and she and Mrs.
Solly have always encouraged me
in my library work," said Long.
Whitney and her mother, Pat,
a nurse at Aultman Hospital,
live in North Canton, but,
originally, they were Hartville
residents. She finds it amusing, giving credence to the old
saying "what goes around, comes
around", to think that she went
to kindergarten in the same
room where she is now the children's librarian.
When asked what a children's
librarian recommends for
Christmas giving, Whitney is
quick to say "all I want for
Christmas is a good book. For
one thing, a book can be shared
over and over again with the
whole family. "The Polar Express' is a wonderful book with
beautiful illustrations. Also,
the C.S. Lewis series the Nam-
ia series as they are called
("The Lion, Tlie Witch and the
Wardrobe") along with tlie 'Little House on the Prairie' series are wonderful books for
any age."
The Hartville Library, located on route 619 east out of
Hartville (behind the fire station) has user friendly hours,
opening at 9 a.m Monday tlirough
Saturday. Monday tlirough Thursday, tlie library closes at 9
p.m. and on Friday and Saturday, closes at 5 p.m.
Any Stark County resident
can use the facility and if you
do not have a Stark County
District Library card, someone
at the Hartville Library will
be glad to give you one. You do
not need to be a resident of
Lake Township to use this library.
Lake Zoning Commission
holds work session
By: BETTY O'NEILL RODERICK
Members of the Lake Township
Zoning Commission held a work
session on Tuesday, November
12, to discuss changes in the
township zoning amendment.
The board reviewed buffer
zone requirements and determined that changes would not be
necessary unless usage of the
property was changed.
In other business, the board
determined that a pedestrian
walkway would need to be clearly identified, and visible to
the public and to other vehicles at drive-up windows.
Action on these issues is
expected to be taken at the
zoning commission's next meeting set for December 17 at 7:30
p.m.
'-'"-" '■'"'■"'" -.'■■■,.--3*
local news in brief
North Canton Planning Commission
The North Canton Planning
Commission will hold a meeting
on Wednesday, December 4, at
7:30 p.m. in the Council Chambers at North Canton City Hall.
The following items will be
on the agenda: Minutes of the
October 2 meeting; Review of
final plat for Sturbridge No.
3, part of outlot 277, 25 lots,
by Cooper and Associates for
Kauth Builders.
Zoning Board of Appeals
The North Canton Zoning and
Building Standards Board of
appeals will hold a meeting on
Tuesday evening, November 26 at
7 p.m. in the Council Chambers
at North Canton City Hall.
The following items will be
on the agenda: Minutes of the
September 24 meeting; Application No. 91-36062 filed Novem
ber 5: Request for variance
frcm height restrictions for
storage building at 125 Clear-
mount SE, by Charles fi Jean
Bender and Application No. 91-
36105 filed November 15: Request for substitution of a
legal, non-conforming use at
1245 S. Main St. for used car
sales, by Red Kalkman.
North Canton Rotary
It is time to make your
reservations for the December
5th Christmas Party. The party
will be held at Congress Lake.
Cocktails will be served at
6:30 p.m.; dinner will be at
7:15.
Call a friend and make plans
*° attend.